Abstract
Social distancing became the primary preventive strategy against Covid19 in 2020. This paper quantifies the effect of distancing policies on the
reproduction rate (Rt) of the virus. I distinguish two restriction types: on
places of gatherings and on ways of mobility. I find that a place or a mobility
restriction reduces Rt by about 38 and 28 percents respectively. This result
suggests roughly 3 restrictions were sufficient to to push Rt below 1 stopping
the epidemic assuming the basic reproduction rate of Covid-19 was 3 in the
first wave. These effects are identified from the cross-country variation of
interventions on a daily-country panel controlling for a rich set of covariates
including neighborhood effects. Voluntary and policy compliant distancing
behaviors are separated by a first stage estimation of the effects of distancing
policies on social activities measured by Google’s mobility reports.